Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 713South Africa
Lion Ridge Body Corporate v Alexander; Lion Ridge Body Corporate v Morata; Lion Ridge Body Corporate v Mukona and Another (17074/2022; 18106/2022; 19220/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 713 (21 September 2022)
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Lion Ridge Body Corporate v Alexander; Lion Ridge Body Corporate v Morata; Lion Ridge Body Corporate v Mukona and Another (17074/2022; 18106/2022; 19220/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 713 (21 September 2022)
Lion Ridge Body Corporate v Alexander; Lion Ridge Body Corporate v Morata; Lion Ridge Body Corporate v Mukona and Another (17074/2022; 18106/2022; 19220/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 713 (21 September 2022)
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sino date 21 September 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
####
Case No. 17074/2022
REPORTABLE: YES
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: YES
REVISED.
21
September 2022
In
the matter between:
LION
RIDGE BODY CORPORATE
Applicant
and
PHILANTHEA
ALEXANDER
Respondent
Case
No. 18106/2022
And
in the matter between:
LION
RIDGE BODY CORPORATE
Applicant
and
MAROPENG
VALENCIA MORATA
Respondent
Case
No. 19220/2022
And
in the matter between:
LION
RIDGE BODY CORPORATE
Applicant
and
MULALO
TERRANCE MUKONA
First Respondent
CINDY
SINDISWE MAKHANYA
Second Respondent
Summary
Practice
– pleadings – application for money judgment for arrear
levies alleged to be due and payable to a body corporate
constituted
under section 2 (1) of the Sectional Titles Schemes Management Act 8
of 2011 – compliance with the applicable
Management or Conduct
Rules must appear from the body corporate’s papers before the
money judgment can be granted.
Practice
– pleadings – application for an order disconnecting or
limiting water and electricity supplied to a body corporate
member’s
unit until judgment debt is satisfied – relief affecting
constitutional rights – relief not competent
unless authorised
by an applicable Management or Conduct Rule or agreed to by the body
corporate member - Management Rule, Conduct
Rule or agreement must be
specifically pleaded, failing which no relief can be granted.
#####
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
AJ
:
1
The applicant in each of these three matters, “Lion
Ridge”, is a body corporate established under
section 1
of the
Sectional Titles Act 95 of 1986
, read with section 2 (1) of the
Sectional Titles Schemes Management Act 8 of 2011 (“the
Sectional Titles Act&rdquo
;). Each of the respondents is a member of
Lion Ridge, because they own a unit in the scheme out of which Lion
Ridge was established.
2
In each application, Lion Ridge asks for judgment in an amount
it claims each of the respondents owes in arrear levies, and water
and electricity charges. In the case of Ms. Alexander, case number
17074/2022, Lion Ridge seeks payment of R44 141.23. In
the case
of Ms. Morata, case number 18106/2022, Lion Ridge seeks payment of
R195 728.87. In the case of Mr. Mukona and Ms.
Makhanya, case
number 19220/2022, Lion Ridge seeks payment of R180 186.10.
3
In addition to judgment in these amounts, Lion Ridge asks for
an order disconnecting the electricity supplied to each of the
respondents’
units, and an order limiting the water supplied to
each unit to not more than six kilolitres per month, until the
judgment amounts
are paid in full. Lion Ridge also asks for an order
declaring the respondents liable for the cost of disconnecting,
limiting, and,
if necessary, reconnecting each of the respondents’
water and electricity supplies.
4
The case made out for this relief in Lion Ridge’s
founding affidavit rests on
sections 2
(5),
4
(h) and
4
(i) of the
Sectional Titles Act. Under
section 2 (5) of the Act, Lion Ridge is
“responsible for the enforcement of the rules and for the
control, administration
and management of the common property for the
benefit of all owners”. The relevant portion of Section 4 (h)
of the Act empowers
Lion Ridge to “
enter
into an agreement with any owner or occupier of a section for the
provision of amenities or services by the body corporate
to such
section or to the owner or occupier thereof”. Section 4 (i) of
the Act allows Lion Ridge “to do all things
reasonably
necessary for the enforcement of the rules and for the management and
administration of the common property”.
5
Lion Ridge says that, exercising its powers
under section 4 (h) of the Act, it entered into an agreement with the
respondents for
the provision of amenities and services to the
respondents’ units. By virtue of its powers under section 4 (i)
of the Act,
Lion Ridge now claims the right to take judgment against
the respondents and to limit or disconnect the utilities supplied to
the
respondents’ units.
However, Lion Ridge neither
alleges the terms of the agreement it says it concluded with the
respondents, nor sets out the rules
of scheme that it seeks to
enforce.
6
Lion Ridge is in principle entitled to claim judgment for
outstanding levies. The power to do so is an incident of section 4
(i),
read with Management Rule 25 in Annexure 1 of the Sectional
Titles Schemes Management Regulations, 2016 (“the
Regulations”).
The Management Rules set out in Annexure 1,
together with the Conduct Rules set out in Annexure 2 of the
Regulations, will apply
to most bodies corporate by operation of law.
Section 10
of the
Sectional Titles Act, and
section 6 of the
Regulations, set out the circumstances under which developers and
bodies corporate can supplement, amend or repeal
the Management or
Conduct Rules. But those Rules represent the default position,
applicable to all bodies corporate, unless some
deviation from them
is alleged and proved. In this case, no such deviation has been
alleged, and I can accept that Annexure 1 applies
to Lion Ridge in
its entirety.
7
The disconnection or limitation of the respondents’
utilities raises more difficult issues. Neither the
Sectional Titles
Act nor the
standard Management and Conduct Rules promulgated under
it empower a body corporate to interfere with a member’s
utility
supply, and Lion Ridge does not allege any other common law
or statutory power to do so. It follows that Lion Ridge has not
identified
the source of its alleged right to disconnect or limit the
respondents’ utilities. Critically, Lion Ridge does not allege
that it has adopted a specific rule, in terms of section 10 of the
Act or section 6 of the Regulations, that empowers it to disconnect
its members’ utilities to recover outstanding levies. Nor does
it set out the terms of the agreement it says it entered into
with
the respondents which empower it, on breach, to seek the relief for
which it now asks me.
8
Mr. Bava, who appeared before me for Lion Ridge, argued that
there is a tacit agreement permitting Lion Ridge to disconnect the
respondents’ utilities to collect outstanding levies. He
submitted that the agreement came into existence as soon as the
respondents became members of the body corporate. However, as he
readily and very fairly conceded, the relevant terms of that
agreement
have not been pleaded in Lion Ridge’s founding
papers. It barely needs stating that a tacit term – especially
a tacit
term authorising the sort of remedy Lion Ridge seeks in these
applications – must be formulated, pleaded and proved before
it
can be relied upon. Lion Ridge’s failure to do this in its
founding papers is fatal to its reliance on a tacit agreement.
9
All of this may seem excessively formalistic. It is tempting
to consider it as little more than common sense that a body corporate
can collect debt from its members, and seek to withdraw services
provided through the body corporate until that debt is paid.
10
The reality is more complex. In the first place, sectional
title schemes exist to allow their members to negotiate and manage
the
terms on which they will live together, share the burdens of
property ownership, regulate access to common property, and achieve
a
range of other ends associated with the administration of a
particular scheme.
11
A body corporate is not an ordinary commercial entity. It
derives its existence and its authority from the
Sectional Titles
Act, and
from the rules its members make for it. The terms on which a
body corporate’s members’ rights to receive water and
electricity may be limited are a classic example the sort of thing
that should be deliberated upon and agreed between them. That
is
precisely what is envisaged under the Act. The Act provides for a
body corporate to enter into agreements governing the supply
of
utilities to particular section owners or occupiers (section 4 (h) of
the Act), and sets up a comprehensive procedure for the
making and
implementation of body corporate rules. These rules “must be
considered to be and interpreted as laws made by
and for the body
corporate” (section 6 of the Regulations).
12
Neither the Act nor the Regulations themselves set out whether
and under what circumstances a body corporate may limit or
discontinue
the utilities supplied to one of its members. It follows
either that the “laws” the body corporate makes “by
and for” itself must grant such a power before the body
corporate exercises it, or that a disconnection must be authorised
in
terms of an agreement reached between the body corporate and a
particular section owner or occupier. I do not know whether Lion
Ridge has made such a “law”, or entered into an agreement
with the respondents, that envisages the disconnection of
water and
electricity for non-payment, because Lion Ridge’s founding
papers do not address its powers to limit or disconnect
the
respondents’ utilities. There is accordingly no pleaded basis
on which I can order the disconnection or limitation of
the
respondents’ utilities.
13
Secondly, Management Rule 25 sets out the procedure to be
followed by a body corporate that wishes to collect a debt owing by
its
members. The Rule requires written notice to be given, not later
than 14 days after the adoption of a body corporate’s budget,
of the contributions and charges due by each member, the due payment
date, the rate of interest, if any, payable on arrear amounts,
and
the details of a dispute resolution process the member can engage if
they wish to challenge the charges sought to be levied
(Management
Rule 25 (1)). A body corporate may not “
debit
a member's account with any amount that is not a contribution or a
charge levied in terms of the Act” or the Management
Rules,
unless the member consents to the charge, or judgment has been given
for it (Management Rule 25 (5)).
14
Lion Ridge does not address these requirements in its founding
papers. It does not allege that Management Rule 25, or some other
valid procedure, has been followed, or that the debts for which it
seeks judgment are debts that have been validly incurred in
terms of
the Act or the applicable Management or Conduct Rules. I prefer to
leave open the question of the lengths to which Lion
Ridge would have
to go to allege and prove compliance with the Act or the applicable
Management or Conduct Rules, but judgment
for outstanding levies –
let alone an order authorising coercive action to enforce the
judgment, such as the disconnection
of utilities – will rarely,
if ever, be granted unless it can be deduced from a body corporate’s
founding papers that
the Act and the applicable Management and
Conduct Rules have been complied with.
15
Thirdly, and probably most importantly, the relief that Lion
Ridge claims implicates a delicate web of constitutional rights.
These
are the right against arbitrary deprivation of property
(section 25 (1) of the Constitution, 1996), the right to sufficient
water
(section 27 (1) (b) of the Constitution, 1996), the public law
right to receive electricity from a municipality, even where the
electricity is transmitted through an intermediary such as a landlord
or a body corporate (see
Joseph v City of Johannesburg
2010
(4) SA 55
(CC), para 47), and the right of access to adequate housing
(section 26 of the Constitution, 1996).
16
Relief limiting these constitutional rights is plainly
incompetent if it is not authorised by law. The form that law might
take
depends on the facts of a particular case. In this matter, the
very least that would have to be established is a provision of the
Sectional Titles Act, a
rule of the body corporate, or a term in an
agreement that authorises the relief Lion Ridge now claims. Lion
Ridge does not allege
any of this. The instrument authorising the
relief, where it exists, may itself have to conform to constitutional
requirements
designed to protect the rights implicated. However,
since no authorising instrument is alleged in Lion Ridge’s
founding papers,
I need not address that issue.
17
I have given some thought to whether Lion Ridge can clothe
itself in the authority of a “service provider” in terms
of the Electricity Regulation Act 4 of 2006 or a “water
services intermediary” in terms of the Water Services Act 108
of 1997. But neither of these enactments applies comfortably to a
body corporate that distributes water and electricity to its
members’
units. Even if they did, a case would have to be made out that the
termination of water and electricity services
to the relevant units
was authorised by a specific condition in a licence or service
delivery agreement (sections 14 (1) (n) and
28 (3) of the Electricity
Regulation Act), or by contract (section 1 of the Water Services
Act). That case has not been made out.
18
Mr. Bava argued that the rights of the respondents to continue
to receive water and electricity must be balanced against the rights
of all the other members of the body corporate to have the
respondents pay their fair share of the costs of running the
sectional
title scheme, and their rights to a body corporate that is
functional and free of excess debt. The problem with this submission
is that it begs the question of what Lion Ridge’s rules say
about the extent to which individual members of the body corporate
have agreed to carry outstanding levies, and what procedures they
have put in place, if any, for enforcing the payment of levies
through disconnecting utilities for non-payment. On this issue, Lion
Ridge’s papers are silent.
19
It is for all these reasons that none of the relief Lion Ridge
claims can be granted. Neither the debt Lion Ridge alleges, nor the
right to disconnect or limit the respondents’ water and
electricity supplies to enforce payment of that debt, have been
established on its founding papers. I will dismiss the applications,
but I emphasise that nothing in this judgment should be understood
as
preventing Lion Ridge from returning to court on the same facts with
papers that adequately address the shortcomings in its
founding
affidavit that I have identified.
20
These applications were moved in my unopposed court on 30
August 2022. While accepting the seriousness of the problems with
Lion
Ridge’s papers that I have set out above, Mr. Bava
submitted that Judges in this Division regularly do grant,
on
an unopposed basis,
orders of the nature Lion Ridge seeks. I
find it difficult to accept that this is a frequent occurrence on
papers as sparsely pleaded
as Lion Ridge’s founding affidavit.
However, if there is a judicial practice of granting bodies corporate
the right to disconnect
utilities to their members’ units
without a Management Rule, a Conduct Rule, a contractual term or some
other legal basis
having been alleged and proved in the body
corporate’s founding papers, then I think that practice
requires urgent and thorough
review.
21
These applications are dismissed, with each party paying their
own costs.
S
D J WILSON
Acting
Judge of the High Court
This
judgment was prepared and authored by Acting Judge Wilson. It is
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties or
their
legal representatives by email and by uploading it to the electronic
file of this matter on Caselines. The date for hand-down
is deemed to
be 21 September 2022.
HEARD
ON:
30 August 2022
FURTHER
SUBMISSIONS ON:
9 September 2022
DECIDED
ON:
21 September 2022
For
the Applicant:
WA Bava
Instructed by Bam
Attorneys
For
the Respondents:
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